Monday, May 04, 2009

Okay, my story on the NBC infront is now up at NJ.com, including a few quotes from Ben Silverman on the state of things (though I didn't get to use all of the lines from my Twitter feed). Feel free to discuss it more here, or to vent more frustration in the post directly below this.

32 comments:

Given the way NBC treats shows (and their audience) what possible motivation would I have to give a new program on their network a try? (That's ignoring the fact that the stuff they picked up is recycled dreck at best.) What incentive is there for a potential audience member to invest in caring about a new show? If it's any good, it gets cut; if it's crap it stays. Nobody's watching what they're airing anyway...why not at least give it a try with creative and interesting instead of derivative and boring?

Is NBC making so much money on the Weather Channel that they just don't care about the network anymore?

And by the way, 4th place isn't the bottom anymore. They can still go down from here...and I hope they do!

NBC seems stuck where ABC was in the early 00s - completely without a rudder, no hallmark shows aside from a few aging ones which have lost their fastball, and a refusal to actually try anything interesting. ABC actually made a commitment to 2 shows in 2004 and it completely turned them around. And the way NBC talks about its shows, I don't see that happening for them anytime soon.

Grey's Anatomy debuted in 2005. It was a midseason replacement. I suppose it had the same "rookie season" as Lost and Desparate Housewives, but I remember those 2 shows made a huge splash when they aired and were paired as the 2 shows which turned the network around. Rightfully so (for Lost at least, I've never seen DH).

Wow Alan I can not belive this they are really a bunch of idiots over at NBC first they shoot themselves in the foot by giving Leno another talk show kicking off 3 hours of that then they decide to recycle old concepts that did not work the first time they tried it and on top of that they now say that in order to keep their one good show Chuck that they will have to settle for half of a season of episodes that is just stupid I think we as Nerd Herders must demand that Chuck get moved to a better network maybe one of the big Cable networks can take it and give it the chance it needs to grow the possiblities for this show are endless sure we worked hard on the save chuck campaign but NBC is so not the right network for this genius of a show Nerd Herd 4 Life!!!!!!

A kind of bizarro possibility for "Day One"--Leno has a set period of vacation time each year. What if they stripped the show at 10 PM five nights a week for three weeks during his vacation, like a miniseries, or what they're doing with season 3 of "Torchwood" over in the UK?

While NBC's executive branch is a mess, I still have a soft spot for it because I find myself watching more shows there than on any other network. The L&O franchise, Chuck, Thursday nights, Friday Night Lights. I adored Life, but I can't really fault them for canceling it with those ratings. In the past, it seemed like the network that took the most risks, but this new schedule is disheartening.

Alan, did you see Marc Bernardin's post on EW last week asking why sci-fi movies do well, yet sci-fi television shows struggle to get an audience? If you caught it, any thoughts?

It's a huge deal with Leno, so they're not going to dump him readily, unless it's part of giving the Tonight Show back to him, which would be a complete debacle all around. And who knows? There might well be an audience for comedy at 10, rather than CBS's slate of endless Bruckheimer retreads or ABC's female-driven stuff.

Alan, do you get the sense that we're all just missing the boat here? Is NBC actually happy with what Silverman and Zucker are doing? Has Silverman convinced them that "psychographic compatibility studies" is some real thing that they should be looking at to justify what is going on? I come here mad about the lineup and find people like you and your readers who agree with my feelings about Chuck and Leno and Heroes and what not, but maybe we're not NBC's target audience anymore. Have you ever met and spoken with someone other than Silverman or Zucker to give you (even off the record) some indication of what the rest of the company feels about the direction Silverman is leading them?

I don't think Leno's Tonight Show has ever been considered comedy unless you love "Headlines". And it's not much of a talk show, not compared to what Tom Snyder used to do or what Charlie Rose still does. (To be fair, Letterman and the rest don't have much talk content either)

It is another 5 hours for stars to promote their next project and not say much of anything. And I suspect it's much cheaper than any comedy or drama, so it will be kept on for as long as Leno wants, barring nuclear disaster ratings.

Friday Night Lights (thank you DirectTV) and Chuck are the only shows I watch on NBC, other than the Today show. I hate reality shows, and frankly nothing else appeals. (Though, I suppose, Medium isn't terrible, but it's been around a while and I wouldn't miss it.) And, truly, I've never found Jay Leno all that funny.

I truly just can't understand why they haven't renewed Chuck. I know, it's in a lousy timeslot. I know, it's not one of "their" shows. But ... sheesh! With the kind of media frenzy its gotten lately, how can they NOT? I could understand their not announcing anything until after last week's finale, to get as much free publicity as possible, but ... why not now?

I know that last year NBC's "In-Front" was designed to show off how they were breaking out of the standard network tv mold, a plan which they immediately kiboshed, but what is the benefit of doing this little dog and pony show two weeks early? If memory serves, NBC used to always have the first day of Upfront Week, so are they really getting any jump on the competition by unveiling some of the elements of their theoretical lineup? What is the advantage of this dog and pony show?

One thing that Alan's article said gives me some hope -- NBC said they were talking to their advertisers about the bubble shows. If that is true, MAYBE the concentrated blitz of Subway buying last Monday may help our beloved Chuck.

Finke is now suggesting that "Chuck" is tied up with "Legally Mad." There was a $2M penalty to be paid to WB for not picking up "Legally Mad." NBC wants to try and play the "drop the penalty and we'll pick up Chuck" game.

Of course, WB could get the last laugh and try and shop "Legally Mad" elsewhere--IIRC, the script was the subject of a bidding war.